A bumper crowd gathered at Burnden Park on this day (March 9th) in 1946, with the chance of watching, home club, Bolton Wanderers play Stoke City in the Sixth Round of the FA Cup. Wanderers were already 2-0 up, in a season when the FA Cup was in its Sixth Round, the only season when the Cup was played over two legs!! Stoke City, at this time, meant that the very famous Stanley Matthews was playing and over 50,000 spectators were expected, but at least 85,000 turned up! The "Bolton Evening News" noted that the game was "irresistible to football lovers of the North. There were all the signs of great Cup tie enthusiasm and a spirit of great humour. When the teams emerged from the "tunnel",surges in the overcrowded Embankment Stand caused thousands of spectators to lose their feet and fall onto the crush barriers which collapsed under the weight. Chaos as many were suffocated and others just crushed. Thirty-three spectators were crushed to death and over 500 injured. Despite this, the match was played after a short interval, fearing that a cancellation would cause further chaos.
The investigation revealed that a father trying to escape the crush with a little boy, broke open the gate and the desperate crowd poured in unaware of what was going on inside. Within minutes, the "glorious day" quickly became the biggest football tragedy. Some fans that had jumped barriers to get into the stadium were blamed but the government enquiry chaired by R. Moelwyn James KG, concluded that the "unauthorised entry was a factor but not the only one."It was believed that 2,000 people over the "safe" capacity had gained entry into the "Embankment Stand" and Hughes opined that "if a lower number of people had been allowed into the stand" then the disaster would not have happpened. It was noted that several stands and turnstiles were not open, creating bottle necks and numbers entering the stadium were not recorded. Hughes announced that numbers entering stadia, especially for big occasions, should be monitored mechanically. His recommendations, however, were not backed up by legislation, as clubs had "the option" to ignore them! The culture of complacency continued for four decades afterwards, a culture betrayed by events at the FA Cup Semi-Final in Hillsborough, Sheffield in 1989!!